I was on the verge of making this, and the magazine going digital is the final push I needed. I have a soft spot for Sunday, and I'm so happy they finally went digital because I've been having problems with my print subscription for the past year.

Shonen Sunday doesn't have survey cards like Jump does, so take the the table's organization with a grain of salt. In addition, series are given a longer chance to find success than Jump before they get canceled.

Lastly, since most of the series don't have an official English release, I will be using the English title provided by Sunday if a series has one, otherwise I'll just use the romanized spelling.

Lets see stuff from Sunday that I follow.
Detective Conan (on/off)
Major 2nd
Magi
Rin-ne (need to catch up on)
Tokiwa Kitareri!! (on/off, I personalilty like his previous work better)
Magic Kaito (Hiatus)
Arata: The Legend (Hiatus)
Silver Spoon (another one i need to catch up on)

Just wondering, does Sunday give their mangakas breaks every once in a while? I say this because there always seem to be quite a lot of series absent each week. If you compare that to something like WSJ, they only get breaks in the extreme circumstances.

Just wondering, does Sunday give their mangakas breaks every once in a while? I say this because there always seem to be quite a lot of series absent each week. If you compare that to something like WSJ, they only get breaks in the extreme circumstances.

I guess so. This week is kind of an irregularity, though. Four of the regular weeklies are absent. However, most of the absentees are either the monthly series, or those that are on hiatus. There are good reasons for the ones on hiatus. For example, Magic Kaito is by Gosho Aoyama who is mostly focusing on Detective Conan, and Ad Astra Per Aspera is by Kenjiro Hata who is the author of Hayate. Then you have Silver Spoon, and Arata where the authors have some personal problems in their lives whether it being health issues, or family emergencies. Plus, Sunday has around 4 more weekly series than Jump, so I'd also like to think that giving breaks to certain series is to keep the amount of pages at a certain number, especially when they have a monthly series in an issue.

I just want to point out that in Jump you have One Piece taking regular breaks every 3-5 chapters. It's been like that for the past 5 or so years. World Trigger is another Jump series that gets more breaks than normal. Both authors' health problems have been documented, so it's understandable if Jump doesn't want to risk it.